Film Review
This classic French comedy brings
together three much-loved stalwarts of French cinema - Pierre Fresnay,
Jean Gabin and Noël-Noël, each playing an anarchic oldster
who is determined to grow old as disgracefully as possible. Think
of it as
Last of the Summer Wine
meets
St Trinians.
Popular French screenwriter Michel Audiard turns in another juicy
gag-laden script which the triumvirate of veteran stars bring to life
with a manic juvenile relish, of the kind that is seldom seen outside a
frenzied South American revolution.
The film was
directed by Gilles Grangier, who was particularly known for this kind
of light-hearted comedy. Although Grangier was generally well
thought of and had many box office hits, he did, in later years, have a
tendency to give his leading actors too much free rein, often to the
detriment of the film. Here, Grangier is amply justified in
standing back and letting his fired up trio of stars do their thing, each
risking a fatal coronary in the process. Gabin and Fresnay are
not particularly known for playing O.T.T. vaudevillian roles but in
this film both are hilarious as troublesome geriatrics living out their
second childhood, terrorising an idyllic rural community as they do
so.
The main
raison d'être
of
Les Vieux de la vieille
is obviously to entertain, which it does admirably. However, it
also prompts us to reflect on how society treats the elderly, an issue
that is as relevant to day as it was when the film was first
seen. In particular, the sequences in the old people's home are
as poignant as they are funny. As the camera slowly pans along a
succession of docile old men seated tidily on a row of benches, their
final port of call resembles more a Fascist-run prisoner-of-war camp
than a happy retirement home - a sad fate for those who had fought for
their country and survived the horrors of the trenches. How
cheered we are when Gabin and company escape this grim outcome and
happily resume their campaign of terror in their home village.
© James Travers, Willems Henri 2010
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Next Gilles Grangier film:
Le Cave se rebiffe (1961)
Film Synopsis
Baptiste Talou, a former railway worker, decides to live out his
declining years in a home for the elderly. Before that, he
returns home to recover some money he left in the house of his friend,
the farmer Blaise Poulossière. Blaise is sitting at the
local café with another friend, Jean-Marie Pejat, who sells
bicycles. After a few drinks, the three men become
trouble-causers of the first order, and so everyone in the village is
glad to see the back of them. A quiet retirement does not suit
the three friends, however, so they agree to move back to the village,
much to everyone's annoyance...
© James Travers
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